So, anyone have any ideas how to "save" a clean creaturecache file, or know of another way to keep NPCScan non-cached upon exiting the game?

Oh, and if you DELETE the file, it will refresh it. The only way I got a new cache is deleting the old one, then exiting game as soon as I got to the login screen which is only 10000x more annoying than simply deleting the file (which was bad enough).

I just set CCleaner to delete it every time my PC is started up. I know that doesn't make it so that you can constantly be scanning even if NPC scan has gone off during the same session but it will save you the hassle of ever having to delete the file after you've started up WoW.

Didn't see it mentioned in the other thread...that's what I would try first. That way, WoW cannot modify the contents of that file. It wouldn't solve the temp-cache that the game maintains, but it would prevent it from being written on logout.

Originally Posted by Tiili

Murder can be justified and to a certain extent I believe genocide can be justified aswell.

Didn't see it mentioned in the other thread...that's what I would try first. That way, WoW cannot modify the contents of that file. It wouldn't solve the temp-cache that the game maintains, but it would prevent it from being written on logout.

Hmm... Worth a shot...

No, I know nothing can solve the temp-cache problem, but I'm not too worried about that. Having it read-only was SO nice when farming rares as exiting the game and coming back takes < 30s.

Now if you could break down how one sets their account "NTFS read-only access", I'd be mucho appreciado (Kinda comp-tarded when it comes to the nitty gritty >.>)

No, I know nothing can solve the temp-cache problem, but I'm not too worried about that. Having it read-only was SO nice when farming rares as exiting the game and coming back takes < 30s.

Now if you could break down how one sets their account "NTFS read-only access", I'd be mucho appreciado (Kinda comp-tarded when it comes to the nitty gritty >.>)

The process varies slightly between operating systems, but it's mostly:

Right click on the file and click properties. Go to the security tab. You'll probably see three groups or usernames in there. SYSTEM, your user account, Administrators. On your username, you can actually just Deny Write. Removing the Allow permissions requires a few extra steps, but isn't necessary if you Deny.

Originally Posted by Tiili

Murder can be justified and to a certain extent I believe genocide can be justified aswell.

Can you set which NPCs to scan for and which to ignore? I'm going for Glorious! and don't care about the ones I've already killed.

Unfortunately no. If it's cached (if you saw it at least once before the last time you deleted it/last patch), it will never go off.

---------- Post added 2012-12-08 at 06:23 AM ----------

Originally Posted by Mindark

The process varies slightly between operating systems, but it's mostly:

Right click on the file and click properties. Go to the security tab. You'll probably see three groups or usernames in there. SYSTEM, your user account, Administrators. On your username, you can actually just Deny Write. Removing the Allow permissions requires a few extra steps, but isn't necessary if you Deny.

Thanks! Will try this and report back when I find it's good!

---------- Post added 2012-12-08 at 07:52 AM ----------

Originally Posted by Mindark

The process varies slightly between operating systems, but it's mostly:

Right click on the file and click properties. Go to the security tab. You'll probably see three groups or usernames in there. SYSTEM, your user account, Administrators. On your username, you can actually just Deny Write. Removing the Allow permissions requires a few extra steps, but isn't necessary if you Deny.

Nope. The dumb new tools resets the file completely in the same way even if I do this method.

Ffs, why does Blizzard have to push my buttons in 20 different ways on EVERY patch, no matter how big or small? Now even the fucking Tools patches are irritating me

Save it as "cache.bat", And place it in your wow folder.
Then you can make a shortcut and place it anywhere you like and add the wow icon to it. It'll be just like starting wow normally, but it deletes the cache files.

If you play on EU, you will have to change it to "enGB" I believe. And if you don't use the 64 bit client, you will have to change the name of the .exe file.

Might not be the right solution for you, but I've found it helps a ton. Especially since my wow on an SSD, so exiting and logging back in takes no time at all.

I run a simple .bat script to delete my cache every time I start the game.

Create a .txt file with notepad and type in the following:

Save it as "cache.bat", And place it in your wow folder.
Then you can make a shortcut and place it anywhere you like and add the wow icon to it. It'll be just like starting wow normally, but it deletes the cache files.

If you play on EU, you will have to change it to "enGB" I believe. And if you don't use the 64 bit client, you will have to change the name of the .exe file.

Might not be the right solution for you, but I've found it helps a ton. Especially since my wow on an SSD, so exiting and logging back in takes no time at all.

If the Launcher turns off the read-only flag, why not just bypass the launcher? I've been doing that for years. If the game needs an update it will just boot you out back to the launcher, so it's not like bypassing the launcher will get you stuck on patch day.

Mine is the simplest of the batch files, I think. Just put it in your WoW folder, and point the shortcut at it instead of at the launcher.

And yes, instead of deleting specific files, I just wipe out the whole Cache folder. It's only a couple hundred Kb, less than a megabyte usually. I don't even notice the network traffic needed to download that much data. (just looked - my Cache folder is currently 492 Kb - less than half a megabyte - and that's after playing 9+ hours today in a single session).

Code:

@echo off
rd /s /q .\Cache\
"World of Warcraft Launcher.exe"

We have done the impossible, and that makes us mighty. - Sgt. Malcolm "Mal" Reynolds, Battle of Serenity Valley

So, anyone have any ideas how to "save" a clean creaturecache file, or know of another way to keep NPCScan non-cached upon exiting the game?

Oh, and if you DELETE the file, it will refresh it. The only way I got a new cache is deleting the old one, then exiting game as soon as I got to the login screen which is only 10000x more annoying than simply deleting the file (which was bad enough).

Download CC cleaner and set it to delete the cache folder when windows boots up, problem solved.

I also use a .bat script at start up and try to remember to run it whenever I close WoW, but I use the Curse Client to update my addons and then I do prefer to go through the launcher. Does anyone know if there's a way to change the target file for the Curse Client to run when you press the play game button?

I also use a .bat script at start up and try to remember to run it whenever I close WoW, but I use the Curse Client to update my addons and then I do prefer to go through the launcher. Does anyone know if there's a way to change the target file for the Curse Client to run when you press the play game button?

I can't find one, Amadis - I searched through both the Registry and all the files I could figure out in the (rather hidden) folder that Curse Client uses.

We have done the impossible, and that makes us mighty. - Sgt. Malcolm "Mal" Reynolds, Battle of Serenity Valley

Yes, but it refreshes with an EMPTY cache, that it then fills up as you play. The next time you reboot, bam, instant empty cache. Or in my case, every time I start WoW from the icon on my desktop, instant empty cache.

We have done the impossible, and that makes us mighty. - Sgt. Malcolm "Mal" Reynolds, Battle of Serenity Valley